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Netherlands stun South Africa at a World Cup again

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Netherlands have now beaten South Africa in two successive World Cups - T20 in 2022 and ODI in 2023 (Cricbuzz)

Days after Afghanistan shocked defending champions England in Delhi, Netherlands added another chapter to the fairytale stories by stunning the in-form South African side with a 38-run win in Dharamsala on Tuesday (October 17).

Chasing a competitive target of 246 from their allotted 43 overs, South Africa started steadily before losing wickets in a heap and slipped from 36/0 to 44/4 in no time. David Miller and Heinrich Klaasen provided some resistance but eventually, they too succumbed to the pressure created by the relentless Dutch bowlers. If not for Keshav Maharaj’s cameo at the back end, the margin of defeat would have been much higher.

When Aryan Dutt bowled a maiden in the first over of the chase, it was evident that Netherlands were determined to make a match of this. However, Quinton de Kock looked to be in rhythm as he got a few boundaries to get the innings going. Bavuma too stroked a few to the fence and a six as well to give the Proteas a decent start. However, Dutt drew first blood when de Kock got some glove on the sweep and it bobbled up for Scott Edwards to do the rest. That was just the tonic Netherlands needed and Edwards quickly decided to bring in more spin through the experienced Roelof van der Merwe.

The seasoned left-arm spinner struck two massive blows to pile on the pressure. Bavuma was cleaned up by an arm-ball that skidded through while Rassie van der Dussen lost his composure to play a reverse sweep straight to backward point. In between, Paul van Meekeren dealt South Africa a huge blow by castling Aiden Markram. The surface didn’t really change much from the Netherlands innings and there was value for good strokeplay still. However, the odd ball perhaps skidded a bit and there was definite help for the quicks early on.

A lot rested on MIller and Klaasen for South Africa to get across the line, and the pair were looking quite comfortable in the middle. But it was that kind of a night in Dharamsala when the rub of the green almost always went Netherlands’ way. A harmless short ball  down leg-side, a delivery that Klaasen would have frequently dismissed to the fence was the one that saw him hole out to fine leg. It was a massive moment in the game as South Africa were just starting to gain momentum in the chase.

Marco Jansen had a struggle in the middle and after he fell, the pressure told on Miller who himself perished to an ill-advised slog across the line. Gerald Coetzee had been giving him decent support till that point but the situation perhaps got the better of the left-hander. With his dismissal went South Africa’s hopes and it was about the margin of victory as far as Netherlands were concerned. They did concede a few towards the end with Maharaj having some fun but the end result was a very comfortable win for them.

It indeed was a roller-coaster win for the Netherlands who were on the brink earlier in the afternoon. Put into bat, they were tottering at 50/4 and 82/5 before skipper Edwards got into the act. As he has often shown in the past, the wicket-keeper batter played with utmost resolve and took the innings deep in his calculative manner. He was particularly severe on Maharaj, employing the sweeps to good effect. South Africa still had the upper hand with regular strikes and had the game in their hands with Netherlands at 140/7. It’s there that the game started to turn in a big way.

Van der Merwe joined his skipper to produce a rollicking 64-run stand that came off just 36 balls. The former in particular was audacious and adventurous, thereby taking the South African bowlers by surprise. His aggression meant that Edwards didn’t have to bother much about the scoring rate although the Dutch skipper himself upped the ante at the back end. Dutt also followed this up with a cameo of his own as a whopping 104 runs came off the last nine overs. It was an incredible flip of events in the game and that momentum clearly drove Netherlands through into the second half. The target was still gettable but South Africa’s batters had a rare off day after being in top form over the last few weeks.

Brief scores:
Netherlands 245/8 in 43 overs (Scott Edwards 78*, Roelof van der Merwe 29; Teja Nidamanuru 20,  Aryan Dutt 23*; Marco Jansen 2-27, Kagiso Rabada 2-56, Lungi Ngidi 2-57) beat  South Africa 207 in 42.5 overs (Quinton de Kock 20, Heinrich Klassen 28, David Miller 43, Keshav Maharaj 40; Geral Coetze 22;  Logan van Beek 3-60, Roelof van der Merwe 2-34, Bas de Leede 2-36, Paul van Meekeren 2-40) by 38 runs



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World Cup 2026: Italy’s football chief resigns after qualifying failure

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Gabriele Gravina, left, and UEFA President Aleksander Ceferin in the stands at the Bosnia and Herzegovina football match against Italy [Aljazeera]

The head of Italy’s football federation (FIGC) has resigned, falling on his sword after the men’s national team failed to qualify for a World Cup for a third consecutive time.

Gabriele Gravina revealed he would step down as the country’s top football official following a meeting held at the FIGC’s headquarters in Rome on Thursday.

His announcement came a day after Sport Minister Andrea Abodi called on him to resign.

Four-time World Cup winners Italy fell at the playoffs again on Tuesday, this time after a penalty shootout against Bosnia and Herzegovina, and will miss this year’s finals in the United States, Canada and Mexico.

The shock waves of the latest humiliation for one of the world’s most successful football nations forced Gravina, 72, to go back on his initial plans to wait until a FIGC board meeting next week to announce a decision on his future.

The FIGC said in a statement that a vote for a new president would be held on June 22.

Giovanni Malago, the former longtime head of the Italian National Olympic Committee who was president of the Milano Cortina Winter Olympics organisation committee, is reportedly one of the names in the hat.

Before then, head coach Gennaro Gattuso is expected to also step down, while general manager Gianluigi Buffon, the former Italy goalkeeper, announced his resignation on Thursday.

Italy’s failure to reach the first-ever 48-team World Cup – which will feature the likes of Cape Verde and Curacao – led Abodi to release a statement saying: “It’s clear that Italian football needs to be rebuilt from the ground up and that starts with changes at the top of the FIGC.”

[Aljazeera]

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Iran says it downed two US jets as search for one pilot continues

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Media representatives gather in front of a heavily damaged building following a strike at the Azadi Sport Complex in Tehran ]Aljazeera]

Iranian forces have said they struck down two fighter jets belonging to the United States military, one over the southwest part of the country and another around the Strait of Hormuz.

A spokesperson for the Iranian military’s Khatam al-Anbiya Central Headquarters said on Friday that air defences completely destroyed one F-15 jet. Later in the day, the Iranian military said it targeted an A-10 US aircraft that crashed into the Gulf.

The New York Times had cited unidentified officials as saying that the A10’s pilot was safe after the crash.

But the fate of at least one pilot from the downed F-15 crew is unknown. Several US media outlets reported that one crew member of the jet was located and rescued by US forces, but the other remains missing.

US President Donald Trump told NBC News on Friday that the downing of the jet will not affect the prospect of talks with Tehran. “No, not at all. No, it’s war. We’re in war,” he said.

State media outlets in Iran showed photos of the wreckage of the F-15 jet and what appears to be an ejection seat with an attached parachute.

After the jet was downed, Iranian Parliament Speaker Mohammad-Bagher Ghalibaf mocked Trump’s repeated claims of victory in the war.

“After defeating Iran 37 times in a row, this brilliant no-strategy war they started has now been downgraded from ‘regime change’ to ‘Hey! Can anyone find our pilots? Please?’” Ghalibaf wrote in a social media post.

There was no immediate comment on the incident from the Pentagon and US Central Command (CENTCOM), which oversees military operations in the Middle East and much of Asia.

[Aljazeera]

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Artemis II crew take ‘spectacular’ image of Earth

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The image, titled Hello, World, shows the Earth and Venus as seen from the Orion capsule [NASA]

Nasa has shared the first high-resolution images of the Earth taken by the Artemis II crew as they head on their trip around the Moon.

The mission’s commander, Reid Wiseman, took the “spectacular” images, Nasa says, after the crew completed a final engine burn that set them on a trajectory towards our closest celestial neighbour.

The first image, called Hello, World, shows the vast expanse of blue that is the Atlantic Ocean, framed by a thin glow of the atmosphere as the Earth eclipses the Sun and green auroras at either pole.

The Earth appears to us as upside down, with the western Sahara and Iberian peninsula visible to the left and the eastern portion of South America to the right.

Nasa identified the bright planet to the bottom right as Venus.

Nasa/Reid Wiseman An image from inside of the Orion capsule, which shows a small window and part of the Earth outside
Wiseman also took this picture, titled Artemis II Looking Back at Earth, from one of the Orion spacecraft’s four main windows [Nasa]

The images were taken after the crew successfully completed a trans-lunar injection burn in the early hours of Friday.

The burn took the Orion spacecraft out of Earth orbit as the four astronauts aboard aim to travel the more than 200,000 miles to the Moon.

Artemis II is now on a looping path that will carry the crew around the far side of the Moon and back again. It is the first time since 1972 that humans have travelled outside of the Earth’s orbit.

The crew should pass around the far side of the Moon on 6 April and return to Earth on 10 April.

NASA Half of the Earth
Another image taken by the crew shows the divide between night and day, known as the terminator, cutting across Earth [NASA]

After the burn was completed, the crew were “glued to the windows” taking pictures, mission specialist Jeremy Hansen told mission control in Houston.

“We are getting a beautiful view of the dark side of the Earth, lit by the Moon,” he said.

Wiseman later called back down to mission control in Houston to ask how to clean the windows, as the astronauts’ enthusiasm to see into space had left them dirty.

The commander had initially found it difficult to take pictures of our planet from the spacecraft, saying taking photos at such a distance made it hard to adjust exposure settings.

“It’s like walking out back at your house, trying to take a picture of the moon,” he told mission control. “That’s what it feels like right now.”

But that is no longer an issue.

Another view captured by Wiseman shows the Earth divided by night and day. That frontier between light and darkness is known as the terminator.

NASA/Reid Wiseman Lights twinkle in the nighttime as the Earth completely occludes the Sun in this image taken from the Orion space capsule.
Lights twinkle in the nighttime as the Earth completely occludes the Sun [NASA]

Later, Nasa published another image showing the Earth in near-complete darkness, with the electric lights of humankind twinkling in the nighttime.

It also produced a side-by-side comparison of 2026’s view of the Earth and a similar one taken by the Apollo 17 team in 1972 – the last time humans set foot on the Moon.

“We’ve come so far in the last 54 years, but one thing hasn’t changed: our home looks gorgeous from space!” it wrote.

NASA Images of Earth taken from the Moon in 1972 (left) and 2026
Then and now: Earth, as seen in 1972 (right) and 2026 (left) [NASA]

[BBC]

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